Ivellious wrote:Just a quick point about giving God credit for everything we do as humans...
I disagree to a point. Why is it egotistical to say that humans have accomplished a great deal in the brief time that we've been on Earth? I understand the concept that God gave us potential. And in that case, God would be indirectly responsible for everything. But the caveat is that if you want to give God credit for everything we do with that potential, all the bad must go with it. Namely, all the evil we commit as a whole, destruction of the planet we are given, raping the Earth and its inhabitants of everything they have to further our development...So if you want to credit everything we do as God's work, be sure to remember that He gave us potential for evil and failure, too...
I'm not totally bashing your idea though. I just wouldn't say that the framework of Christianity demands that God gets credit for everything we do as individuals that is good, while he gets no credit for the bad. It either needs to cut both ways or we need to be held responsible and given credit for using that potential and how we use it.
That's actually a good point Ivellious and it illustrates discussions that take place as well within Christianity, between those who take a hard deterministic point of view and those who advocate that there is free will. What isn't usually doubted is God's foreknowledge. It's a question of active determination, or permissive will granted which implies that along with the choice to do "right" there must necessarily be the opportunity and ability to do "wrong" or right and wrong have no real meaning and further God's desire to relate and commune with man cannot be a relationship of "love" where man is without choice.
That's oversimplified but that captures it in a nutshell.
Some christians do have a tendency to attribute all that is good in their lives to God while taking personal responsibility for that which is bad or wrong in their lives. That arises from a desire to worship God and give Him thanks. It's not strictly true however when we look at both Christians and non-Christians. Most Christians, even those who believe in Total Depravity, don't believe that that means every person is just as wrong and evil as they can be. We recognize what is called as "Prevenient Grace" or "Common Grace" meaning that even people who don't directly acknowledge God or commune with Him, are capable of good acts of charity and kindness to others. I'll be honest too when I say I know some non-Christians who are kinder and more charitable people than some Christians. Of course the reverse is true as well. It is sad that some who name themselves as Christians either haven't really made a sincere personal commitment to allowing God to work through them, or are not allowing God to transform them into a person that others can look at and be attracted to God by the sweet smell that comes from their lives and love of others. I confess, I often need to be reminded of that myself and I'm not by any means a stellar example in all areas at all times.
Ultimately Christians don't believe that God judges us on the scales of the good in our life outweighing the bad. While there is good on a common level that can be identified in many, at the core we are in need of God to rescue us by His grace and we rely upon Him and Christ to do that work in us, and on the other side, while we're certainly not perfected by God yet in all areas of our lives, the assumption is that because we love God and share God's love for others, we'll act in the manner Jesus taught and modeled (Golden rule, Loving our enemies, the beatitudes, etc.).
Often times criticisms I see coming from New or Militant atheists, tend to make huge generalizations of their own and take the most inconsistent forms of Chrisitianity that they can find and by that label all Christians in broad sweeping generalizations. Of coure, that takes place in the other direction as well. While Christians are not going to surrender our belief that Christ is the bridge between God and Man, we are to treat others with respect and show sacrificial love and patience toward those who disagree with us or even who are our declared enemies. At least, that's the example Jesus set that we're to follow.
Dogmatism is the comfortable intellectual framework of self-righteousness. Self-righteousness is more decadent than the worst sexual sin. ~ Dan Allender